Book Image

Learn MongoDB 4.x

By : Doug Bierer
Book Image

Learn MongoDB 4.x

By: Doug Bierer

Overview of this book

When it comes to managing a high volume of unstructured and non-relational datasets, MongoDB is the defacto database management system (DBMS) for DBAs and data architects. This updated book includes the latest release and covers every feature in MongoDB 4.x, while helping you get hands-on with building a MongoDB database app. You’ll get to grips with MongoDB 4.x concepts such as indexes, database design, data modeling, authentication, and aggregation. As you progress, you’ll cover tasks such as performing routine operations when developing a dynamic database-driven website. Using examples, you’ll learn how to work with queries and regular database operations. The book will not only guide you through design and implementation, but also help you monitor operations to achieve optimal performance and secure your MongoDB database systems. You’ll also be introduced to advanced techniques such as aggregation, map-reduce, complex queries, and generating ad hoc financial reports on the fly. Later, the book shows you how to work with multiple collections as well as embedded arrays and documents, before finally exploring key topics such as replication, sharding, and security using practical examples. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed with MongoDB 4.x and be able to perform development and administrative tasks associated with this NoSQL database.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Essentials
5
Section 2: Building a Database-Driven Web Application
9
Section 3: Digging Deeper
13
Section 4: Replication, Sharding, and Security in a Financial Environment
14
Working with Complex Documents Across Collections

Summary

In this chapter, you were shown implementations that follow the action-domain-responder software design. The first section discussed how pagination can be accomplished by using the skip and limit parameters, used in conjunction with the pymongo.collection.find* methods. The practical application shown was to paginate a customer's purchase history.

You then learned how to service product photos directly out of the MongoDB database using HTML image tags and Base64-encoded data. Next, you learned about jQuery and DataTables, and how to incorporate them into a web application. When configured, the data table makes AJAX requests of your application, which then performs a MongoDB lookup, returning the results as JSON.

Finally, you learned how to configure a web script to accept REST requests that detect the HTTP Accept header, and determine which JSON data format to produce: JSend, JSON:API, or hal+json.

In the next section, you will learn how to design advanced data structures...